Showing posts with label no vegetables which subji can i make. Show all posts
Showing posts with label no vegetables which subji can i make. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Marwadi Mangodi Mattar, A Classic Rajasthani Dish



If you are married women you will surely relate to my post today. The house where you were born, the house where you spent your childhood, the house where you parents live, the lanes, the neighborhood all is very very close to your heart and no other place on this planet can be like that. Agree?? There is something so special about your childhood house isn't it? The feel of the veranda, the freshness in the rooms, and the smell in the kitchen everything makes it no less than a heaven. Now, you might have your own house, the one you decorated yourself but the happiness and bliss you feel when you go to your first house is something inexpressible.

I used to come back from my tuition class at about 7pm, the time when my maa would be in kitchen preparing dinner. When I close my eyes, I can visualize everything very clearly. My mom is clad in a printed chiffon sari ,is adding spices in the curry and after a quick mix she covers it and lets it cook. In the meantime, she is kneading the dough, I can hear her bangles making noise; suddenly she turns and say to me-beta tu aagayi, chal garam garam khana kha le. I am sure it is the story of every house, no one in this world can love you so selflessly.


Whenever I try my maa’s specialty dishes, I give her a call and take all the instructions. Instant mango pickle, green tomato chutney, chilli pickle, gond ke ladoos and baigan ka bharta are some of my mom’s recipes that I shared in my blog (do take a look). Just few days back when I was planning to make Marwadi Mangodi Mattar, I rang her and asked her about the authentic marwadi way of making this subji.

Those of you don't know, mangodi or badi is sun dried lentils dumplings. Mangodi is another classic example of Rajasthani or marwadi cuisine. The shortage of rains and water always made Rajasthanis think out of the box and thus they commenced using gram flour to make gatte; lentils to make mangodi and flour to make papad- and these final products were used in curries-Mastermind ideas. Totally brilliant-isn't it??? So the days when you are out of veggies think about this recipes- Papad ki subji or Gatte ki subji.


There are ofcourse many ways to prepare this subji, but I will go ahead and claim that this the authentic way of making it. All the households in Rajasthan make this subji in the pressure cooker and they add only peas and tomato in it-no potatoes, carrots, garlic or onions. The mongodi are broken into small pieces which is later roasted the in ghee(clarified butter) with hing(asafoetida) and jeera(cumin). Finally all the spices are added and subji is garnished with spoonful of lemon juice and chopped coriander leaves. There goes the recipe.

Ingredients:
Green peas - 2 cups
Mangodi - 1 cup
Tomatoes -2 (medium size)
Green chilli - 2
Ginger - 1 inch piece
Ghee – 4 tablespoons
Asafoetida – 1/4 teaspoon
Cumin seeds - ½ teaspoon
Turmeric powder - ½ teaspoon
Coriander powder - 1 teaspoon
Red chilli powder - ¼ teaspoon
Salt - as per taste
Lemon juice-1 teaspoon
Green coriander – 4 tablespoon (finely chopped)

Method:
Chop green chillies, tomatoes and ginger finely.
Break Mangodi into small pieces. You can do this in mortar and pestle.
Heat ghee in pressure cooker. When ghee is hot turn the flame to slow, add in cumin seeds, asafoetida and broken mangodi pieces. On a slow flame roast till cumin seeds become brown and release aroma.
Add in turmeric powder, salt, red chilli powder, coriander powder and green chillies. Sprinkle 2 tablespoons of water and mix well.
Throw in peas and tomatoes. Mix and 3 cups of water. Cover the pressure cooker and increase the flame to medium.
Let it cook till pressure cooker releases 3 whistles.
Open the cooker and mash peas from the back of the spoon.
Mix in lemon juice and garnish with chopped coriander leaves.

Notes:
Ghee is the best option, but if you want you can use oil as well.
Make sure you don’t break mangodi into very small bits.
The consistency is semi liquid. Adjust water as per your preference.
I used mangodi that was made with yellow moong dal, you can use any type.


Serving suggestions:
This recipe serves 4-5 family members.
Goes well with parathas or rotis.
To make rajasthani thali,  serve it with bajre ki roti, marwadi lehsun ki chutney and marwadi Bharwa Bhindi.

Monday, July 28, 2014

Marwadi Papad Ki Subji, Curry Without Veggies



Last whole week was very interesting for me. It was a free week-too much time for me, too many movies and very little cooking. Don’t you just love when you get some ‘me time’? I am sure you do! Mr. Husband was in Hong Kong for the whole week and I had too much spare time-which I use neither in cooking nor in clicking. It was a movie marathon time for me-I watched 12 movies. I even shared on my Facebook page about the movie Julie and Julia-trust me every food blogger/lover must see this movie. It is awesome-period!

Coming back to today’s post, it is once again from my Marwadi kitchen- Papad Ki Subji/Poppadoms Curry. Yes that’s possible- people all over Rajasthan use papad to make curry and it is really really popular and my personal favourite. Whose idea was that? Who was such a genius? Well that we don’t know yet, but I am sure it was the necessity that turned out to be this amazing invention. The shortage of rains and water always made Rajasthanis think out of the box and thus they commenced using gram flour to make gatte; lentils to make mangodi and flour to make papad- and these final products were used in curries-Mastermind ideas. Totally brilliant-isn't it???


Marwadi cuisine is my favorite; after all I am a marwadi that too from Rajasthan. Months back I blogged about Marwadi Aloo Pyaz Ki Subji and the response was unbelievable-it was the most popular recipe on my blog for months; fellow blogger tried and loved it. Next, I posted about Marwadi BharwaBhindi and it too was liked by many. Soon I got requests about posting more marwadi recipes on my blog. So here it is.

Papad ki subji can be made in many ways; I am ofcourse sharing the authentic marwadi style. It is one no nonsense curry-no chopping of vegetables, no onion, no garlic; just simple yogurt and basic spices are used. The roasted papads are broken roughly and is added to the yogurt gravy with spoon full of chopped coriander leaves-the outcome is lip smacking, spicy curry.


Ingredients:
Papads – 10
2 tablespoons oil
1 teaspoon cumin seeds/jeera
Pinch asafoetida/hing
1/2 cup yogurt/dahi
1 and 1/2 cup water
2 tablespoons Coriander Powder/dhaniya
1 tablespoon gram flour/besan
1/2 teaspoon Turmeric Powder/haldi
To taste- red chilli powder/lal mirchi
To taste-salt
2 tabelspoons coriander leaves chopped/dhaniya
1 tablespoons lemon juice

Method:
Roast/ fry/ microwave the Papads. Break them into pieces.
In a pan, heat the oil and add in the Cumin Seeds and allow them to splutter. Add in the asafoetida.
Meanwhile, work on the ingredients for the gravy, in a cup mix the yogurt and 1/2 cup of water. To the Yogurt mix add spices: Coriander Powder, Turmeric Powder, Gram Flour, Red Chili Powder and Salt. Mix well.
Turn down the heat to the lowest and add the yogurt/water mix while stirring constantly.
Keep stirring and once the mixture is all in the pan, increase the heat to a medium. Allow the mixture to reduce and the oil to separate.
Add the broken pieces of papad and mix.
Add the remaining water and allow it to cook for 8-10 minutes.
Taste and adjust the spices, add lemon juice if needed.
Garnish with Cilantro and serve hot.


Notes:
If the yogurt is not sour, leave the yogurt on the counter-top overnight to get it to sour.
Don’t add too much salt first time, remember papad has salt.
You can chopped onion and garlic too, before adding yogurt gravy in the oil.
You can use any papad you want to, I used Natco Cumin/Jeera ones.